NAFTA talks: Like Mexico, Canada may need 'insurance' against tariffs - Action News
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PoliticsAnalysis

NAFTA talks: Like Mexico, Canada may need 'insurance' against tariffs

Canada maintains that its efforts to evade American tariffs on steel and aluminum, and threatened tariffs on cars, are on a "separate track" from the ongoing NAFTA talks. But that's never been the way U.S. President Donald Trump sees it. Negotiators have a tough call to make this week.

White House trade strategy is based on tariff threats, so Canada may be 'playing for show' this week

U.S. President Donald Trump appears to have a fondness for threatening countries with tariffs if they refuse to sign trade deals he likes. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

Canada maintains that its efforts to evade Americantariffs on steel andaluminum, and threatened tariffs oncars, are on a "separate track"from the ongoingNAFTAtalks.

But that's not howU.S. President Donald Trump sees it. His attempts touse tariffs as leverage in NAFTA negotiations have become such a ingrained habitby this point, he's started usingthe word as a verb.

"If countries will not make fair deals with us, they will be 'Tariffed!'" he tweeted Monday.

China was in Trump'ssights at the start of the week but by week's end he also could be talking about Canadaand his threat to impose "national security" tariffs of 20 to 25 per cent on its auto industry if it doesn't soonjoin thenew North American trade deal Americans sketched out with Mexico last month.

One of Trump'sloyal Congressional soldiers, House Majority Whip SteveScalise, warned Tuesday that Congresswould "consider its options" if Canada doesn't sign on.

Foreign Affairs MinisterChrystiaFreelandinsistsCanada won't sign a bad deal.

"That's not rhetoric," she told reporters before she left again for Washington. Still, she said, Canadians have a "talent for compromise."

I don't think we're going to get aNAFTAdeal any time soon.- Monica deBolle, senior fellow at Washington's Peterson Institute for International Economics

Her negotiators facea tough call. Even if they strike deals and close the remaining chapters by Thursday, Freeland'sMexican counterpart suggested, if they're going to have a text forCongress by the end of the month a bigger question lurks.

Would a renegotiatedNAFTAlift damagingsteel and aluminum tariffsand shut down threatsof future car tariffs? If it didn't, why wouldCanada sign on?

Monica deBolle, a senior fellow at Washington's Peterson Institute for International Economics, said people have been too focused on specificsticking pointsdairy concessions,dispute resolution chapters, intellectual propertydemands and more.

"The big picture is the threat of tariffs," she said. "And not just the threat. The ones already in place."

Mexicans sought'insurance'

Mexico's preliminary agreement in principle with the U.S. included a side letter that acceptsvoluntary export restraints, or quotas, on future automotive exports to the U.S. In return, future car tariffs won't apply toshipments below the mutually-acceptable level.

DeBollewas in Mexico last week, speaking to officials from both the outgoing and incoming administrations.

"All of them said explicitly that this letter was their insurance," she said. "They're very straightforward in terms of saying that this is why they accepted this dealwhich, on the surface, seems to have been a bad deal for them in many other respects."

DeBollesaid that the Trump administration may double back and impose car tariffs on Mexico anyway, but the Mexicans are betting that they won't.

It's unclear the U.S. would have anything to gain from Canada agreeing to a voluntary quota on cars or car parts. Automotive production in Canada has been falling overall, unlike in Mexico where automotive companies have continued to expand. (The Canadian Press)

Because of this move, "I can't see how the Canadians are not going to demand a similar insurance," she said.

But there were no assurances for Mexico about the removal of steel and aluminum tariffs something that's important to both countries but arguably more critical for Canada, given how much it exports to the U.S.

"Because the Mexicans gave so much away, it puts Canada in a tricky position," she said. "The U.S. is just basically going to say to the Canadians, 'We didn't do this for Mexico, so we're not going to do this for you.'"

The Trump administration's trade strategy is premised on creating American jobs by putting up tariff walls tosupport domesticindustries. They aren't about to roll anything back, deBollesaid.

Proceeding with a newNAFTAwithout a de-escalation ontariffswould be a hard sell for the Trudeau government at home. That's why de Bollethinks the Canadians are unlikely to settle this week.

"I don't think we're going to get aNAFTAdeal any time soon," she said. "I wouldn't be surprised if the Canadians are just playing for show here."

'Messy' to cut out Canada

FlavioVolpe, the president of Canada'sAutomotiveParts Manufacturers' Association, said he won't judge Mexico's decision to accept quotas in the face of a serious threat to its economy. But he's concerned about the precedent it sets.

Thisthreat of car tariffs may or may not be legitimate,Volpesaid; major players in the U.S. automotive industry have warned of dire economic consequences, and Republican SenatorOrrinHatch warned Congress could repeal Trump's tariff powers if he followed through.

When it comes toNAFTA,"all of the things that exclude Canada are messy for American commercial interests," he said."Whether it means something specifically to the president or not, it does mean something to Congress."

Instead of a side letter, Canada couldinsist the Commerce Department change the scope of its investigation to exclude itsNAFTApartners.

The U.S. doesn't need to put quotas on Canada anyway: Canada's industry has been shrinking, not expanding like Mexico's.

Lifting steel and aluminum tariffs is trickier,Volpesaid, because the U.S. industry is operating at only 50 per cent of its capacity.By contrast, the American automotive industryis operating atclose tofull capacity.

Canada's strongest defence is the damage car tariffs would do to the U.S. industry.

"Canada's not going to be the biggest loser on this one,"Volpesaid, adding his organization will be one of many heading to court to defend their industry.

Face-saving pragmatism?

Trade lawyer Mark Warner sees a tough choice shaping up for Canada between trying its luck with the chaos that might unfold if this week's deadline is missed, or swallowing some national pride in the name of pragmatism.

It's not realistic to think that Trump will retract his tariff threats, he said. Canada may believe thatlevying national security tariffs against an ally is wrong, but that's notgetting it anywhere.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland told reporters before she left for Washington that Canada means what it says about not signing a bad renegotiated NAFTA deal. Failing to capitulate to U.S. demands is creating frustration at the negotiation table. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

"Their bet is that Trump won't do what he says he's going to do, he won't withdraw fromNAFTA, and he won't put the [section] 232 tariffs on autos," he said. "Personally, my view is that those are two big bets.

"I doubt that Canada will get a formal carve-out from 232 tariffs explicitly made in this agreement. The practical thing, as the Mexicans figured out, is, 'Let's give him a face-saving device.'"

If quotas are set high enough, they might not hurt Canadian industries. But they could make the Trump administration feel like it has a win, and climb down.

"You've got to be a bit creative," Warnersaid.

Otherwise, Canada might needCongress to ride to its rescue to block either the car tariffsor Trump'swithdrawal from NAFTAaltogether.

Warner suspects aveto-proof majorityin support of the existing NAFTA may be hard to achieve now, let alone after November's unpredictable midterms.